Having deft diplomacy to
successfully isolate Pakistan on the Kashmir issue at the UN and engineered
India's unprecedented victory for the judgeship of the World Court over a
Security Council permanent member, Syed Akbaruddin has wound up his term as
India's Permanent Representative to the world body.
Akbaruddin, who retired after a 35-year career in the Indian Foreign Service this month, helped create history when the members of the UN overwhelmingly voted for the re-election of Dalveer Bhandari in 2017 rebelling against the hegemony of the permanent members and forced Britain to withdraw its candidate Christoper Greenwood, who had the majority support in the Security Council.
It marked a clear shift in the balance of power at the UN, from old colonial powers of the last century to the emerging nations of this. "I was lucky to represent India when our global image was on the rise," Akbaruddin said, "attributing the nation's successes during his tenure to that and an appreciation of how New Delhi engaged with countries around the world.
Pakistan's persistent, intensive diplomacy to internationalize the Kashmir issue was checkmated with 189 of the 193 members repudiating it. Besides Pakistan, only Malaysia and Turkey have raised it in the General Assembly, and even that only once and giving up after being isolated.
China tried twice to bring it up in the Security Council but couldn't even get a statement acknowledging that it had been discussed in closed-door consultations. He helped rip China's protective mantle over Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar and have him listed as a global terrorist by the UN Security Council. Of his diplomacy, Akbaruddin said: "The only way to succeed here is through partnerships." And partnerships he had built aplenty winning the regard of fellow-diplomats and UN leaders.
Akbaruddin projected India's soft-power at the UN, organizing grand concerts by maestros A.R. Rahman and Amjad Ali Khan at the General Assembly chamber. The UN issued a stamp honouring the classical Carnatic singer MS Subbulakshmi in 2016, commemorating her UN concert 50 years earlier that year in 1966. And during the International Yoga Days he literally had 'asanas' projected on the UN headquarters building and for Diwali a greeting, the image of which became the backdrop for a Diwali stamp set issued by the UN postal system.
Quick to seize opportunities for India's image-building, he promoted the construction of the 50-kilowatt Gandhi Solar Park on a UN building to provide clean electricity to the UN complex as Secretary-General Antonio Guterres prioritized a global move away from fossil fuel-generated power.
Akbaruddin's tenure also saw the launch of the UN-India Partnership Fund that provides aid to small developing countries. Starting in 2017 with a project to provide a climate early warning system for seven island nations in the Pacific region, the programme has grown into a 10-year programme with a goal of $150 million. Currently there are 40 projects covering 39 countries.
The Fund also distinguishes itself from China's controversial aid programmes by providing assistance multilaterally through the UN. An avid user of social media, who pushed its multimedia use by the mission, Akbaruddin was ranked the diplomat at the UN with the second-highest number of Twitter followers after then-US Permanent Representative Nikki Haley. A second generation diplomat - his father Syed Bashiruddin was India's Ambassador to Qatar - Akbaruddin joined the foreign service in 1985. (IANS)